Jury finds Judge Hannah Dugan guilty of obstruction for helping an
immigrant evade federal agents
[December 19, 2025]
By TODD RICHMOND
MILWAUKEE (AP) — A jury found a Wisconsin judge accused of helping a
Mexican immigrant dodge federal authorities guilty of obstruction
Thursday, marking a victory for President Donald Trump as he continues
his sweeping immigration crackdown across the country.
Federal prosecutors charged Milwaukee County Circuit Judge Hannah Dugan
with obstruction, a felony, and concealing an individual to prevent
arrest, a misdemeanor, in April. The jury acquitted her on the
concealment count, but she still faces up to five years in prison on the
obstruction count.
The jury returned the verdicts after deliberating for six hours. Dugan
faces up to five years in prison when she's sentenced, but no date had
been set as of late Thursday evening.
The case inflamed tensions over Trump’s immigration crackdown, with his
administration branding Dugan an activist judge and Democrats countering
that the administration was trying to make an example of Dugan to blunt
judicial opposition to the operation.
Dugan and her attorneys left the courtroom, ducked into a side
conference room and closed the door without speaking to reporters. Steve
Biskupic, her lead attorney, later told reporters that he was
disappointed with the ruling and didn't understand how the jury could
have reached a split verdict since the elements of both charges were
virtually the same.
U.S. Attorney Brad Schimel denied the case was political and urged
people to accept the verdict peacefully. He said courthouse arrests are
safer because people are screened for weapons and it isn’t unfair for
law enforcement to arrest wanted people in courthouses.

“Some have sought to make this about a larger political battle,” Schimel
said. “While this case is serious for all involved, it is ultimately
about a single day, a single bad day, in a public courthouse. The
defendant is certainly not evil. Nor is she a martyr for some greater
cause.”
U.S. Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche praised the verdict on X,
saying nobody is above the law, even judges.
According to a court filings that include an FBI affidavit and a federal
grand jury indictment, immigration authorities traveled to the Milwaukee
County courthouse on April 18 after learning 31-year-old Eduardo
Flores-Ruiz had reentered the country illegally and was scheduled to
appear before Dugan for a hearing in a state battery case.
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This courtroom sketch depicts Milwaukee County Circuit Judge Hannah
Dugan in court, Tuesday, Dec. 16, 2025 in Milwaukee, Wis. (Adela
Tesnow via AP)

Dugan learned that agents were in the corridor outside her courtroom
waiting for Flores-Ruiz. She left the courtroom to confront them,
falsely telling them their administrative warrant for Flores-Ruiz
wasn’t sufficient grounds to arrest him and directing them to go to
the chief judge’s office.
While the agents were gone, she addressed Flores-Ruiz’s case off the
record, told his attorney that he could attend his next hearing via
Zoom and led Flores-Ruiz and the attorney out a private jury door.
Agents spotted Flores-Ruiz in the corridor, followed him outside and
arrested him after a foot chase. The U.S. Department of Homeland
Security announced in November he had been deported.
Prosecutors worked during Dugan’s trial to show that she directed
agents to the chief judge’s office to create an opening for
Flores-Ruiz to escape.
An FBI agent who led the investigation testified that after agents
left the corridor, she immediately moved Flores-Ruiz’s case to the
top of her docket, told him that he could appear for his next
hearing via Zoom and led him out the private door.
Prosecutors also played audio recordings from her courtroom in which
she can be heard telling her court reporter that she’d take “the
heat” for leading Flores-Ruiz out the back.
Her attorneys countered that she was trying to follow courthouse
protocols that called for court employees to report any immigration
agents to their supervisors and she didn’t intentionally try to
obstruct the arrest team.
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